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Thursday, March 12, 2020

South Korea seeks to contain smaller outbreaks as new coronavirus cases slow

South Korea on Thursday reported 114 new cases of the coronavirus and six more deaths, resuming a relative decline in new cases after a spike the day before.

The new cases bring the country’s total to 7,869, with 66 deaths, the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said (KCDC), as health officials seek to track down and contain a number of new clusters of infections, including at a call centre in the capital Seoul.
The numbers are far lower than the peak of 909 cases reported on Feb. 29, and health officials said the trend does appear to be slowing in what has been the largest outbreak in Asia outside of China.
Still, authorities say the coming days will be crucial in South Korea’s fight to contain the outbreak, and the government will double down on its efforts to prevent new clusters from spreading.
“It is too early to say we are overcoming the disease,” Yoon Tae-ho, director general for public health policy, said at a briefing.
“We are still witnessing sporadic outbreaks so we cannot lower our guard.”
Nineteen of the new cases reported on Thursday were in Seoul, where at least 102 people working at a call centre have tested positive for the coronavirus, raising concerns about a wider outbreak in the capital.
Nearly 800 people working in the call centre and 200 residents of the building have been tested, Seoul Mayor Park Won-soon said.
“Containing the spread from the call centre is decisive in blocking additional transmission of the coronavirus,” Park said. “We will focus all necessary personal and material support on the area.”
Seventy-three of the new cases were from the city of Daegu, the epicentre of the country’s outbreak.
Yoon urged South Koreans across the country to avoid public gatherings and maintain “social distancing” from other people.
The government also said it would expand fever screening and other monitoring measures for people arriving from certain European countries.
South Korea is one of several countries affected by a new U.S. Defence Department decision announced on Thursday to restrict travel by its troops and their families for the next 60 days.
Around 28,500 U.S. troops are stationed in South Korea, along with thousands of civilian employees and family members.
At least eight people connected to the U.S. military in South Korea have tested positive for the virus, and bases in the country have imposed some restrictions and additional screening at their gates.
https://www.marketscreener.com/news/South-Korea-seeks-to-contain-smaller-outbreaks-as-new-coronavirus-cases-slow–30147743/

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